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Climate of 'fear and confusion' leading to childhood depression

posted Tuesday, 19 September 2006

By Ben Fenton

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, joined the debate on the state of British childhood this morning, endorsing many of the points made in the Telegraph's Hold on to Childhood coverage.

Speaking before the launch of the Children's Society's Good Childhood Inquiry, Dr Williams said that it would be "worth a try" to ban all advertising aimed at children and called for a review on the level of testing British children received in schools.

Asked about the amount of marketing materials that faced children on a daily basis and were the spur for what is known as "pester power" he said: "I think there are real issues which the Advertising Standards Authority, as far as I know, are very concerned about and I have had conversations with them in the past."

The inquiry, headed by Prof Sheila Dunn, the child psychologist and Lord Layard, an economist and government adviser, came in the wake of 110 child experts, authors and doctors writing to the Telegraph calling for a halt in the march of what they called "toxic childhood".

The experts said last week that childhood in Britain was being poisoned by a sinister cocktail of poor diet, over competitive schooling, too much time spent in front of electronic screens and a constant assault by marketing campaigns.

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© Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 2006

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